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AP Economics:
Monopoly FRQs
December 2016
1. The graph below shows the demand and cost curves of a firm that does not price
discriminate.
(a) Suppose the firm produces at the profit-maximizing output. Using the labeling on the
graph, identify each of the following:
(i) Level of output. Explain. Q2. This is where MR=MC.
(ii) Price P5.
(b) Suppose the firm produces at the revenue-maximizing output. Using the labeling on the
graph, identify each of the following:
(i) Level of output. Explain. Q3. This where MR becomes negative. At output levels
below Q3, the firm can always increase TR by producing another unit of output.
(ii) Price P3
(c) Suppose the government regulates the firm's price to produce the allocatively efficient
level of output. Using the labeling on the graph, identify each of the following:
(i)
The price the government would require the firm to set P1
(ii)
The allocatively efficient level of output Q4
(d) Suppose the firm produces at the allocatively efficient level of output.
(i) Would it be earning a profit or incurring a loss? Explain. A Loss, because P1 is lower
than ATC at Q4 output level.
(ii) Using the labeling on the graph, identify the area of the profit or loss at the allocatively
efficient level of output. P1P2eg
(e) Using the labeling on the graph, identify the consumer surplus at the allocatively efficient
level of output. Triangle gP1P7
(f) Suppose the regulators establish a price that allows the firm to just cover all its
opportunity costs. Using the labeling on the graph, identify the price the regulators would
set to achieve this objective. P3…A firm earns a normal profit where ATC=D
2. There is one art museum on the island of Watsonia. The museum's demand and cost curves are
shown in the graph below. The museum currently relies on an admission charge for some of its
funding. Its directors are debating about how to set the admission charge.
(a) Using the labeling of the graph above, identify the price and quantity associated with the
following objectives.
(i) The museum maximizes its profit. P5, Q2
(ii) The museum maximizes its total revenue. P3, Q4
(iii) The museum maximizes the sum of consumer and producer surplus. P4, Q3 (MC=D)
(iv) The museum maximizes its attendance, as long as it breaks even. P2, Q5 (ATC=D)
(b) When the attendance is Q1, is the demand price elastic, inelastic, or unit elastic? Explain.
Elastic. At Q1 MR>0…or Q1 is less than the Revenue Maximizing attendance of Q 4
(c) Assume that the price is set at P2. Assuming the existence of an opportunity cost, indicate
whether the museum's accounting profits would be positive, negative, or zero. Explain why.
Positive. At P2, attendance would be Q5 and P = ATC, so economic costs are zero. With
the existence of an opportunity cost, accounting profits must be positive, because
economic profits = accounting profits minus opportunity costs
(d) Assume that the government decides the museum should charge no admission and agrees to
subsidize the museum for any losses.
(i) Using the labeling in the graph, identify the museum's attendance under that
circumstance. Q7
(ii) Would the outcome be allocatively efficient? Explain. No. P<MC
3. CableNow is the only supplier of cable TV services offering a wide range of TV channels.
CableNow is an unregulated firm and is currently earning an economic profit. Assume that
CableNow does not practice price discrimination.
(a) Draw a correctly labeled graph for CableNow and show each of the following. Make sure
your graph is large enough to be legible.
(i) The profit-maximizing quantity of cable services, labeled as Q*
(ii) The profit-maximizing price, labeled as P*
(iii) The area of economic profit, completely shaded
(iv) The socially optimal level of cable services, assuming no externalities, labeled as QS
(b) Assume that the government grants CableNow a lump-sum subsidy of $1 million. Will this
policy change CableNow's profit-maximizing quantity of cable services? Explain.
(c) Instead of granting a subsidy, assume now that the government chooses to require
CableNow to produce the quantity at which CableNow earns zero economic profit. On the
graph you drew in part (a), label this quantity QR.
(d) At QR, is the firm's accounting profit positive, negative, or zero? Explain.
(e) Assume that a new study reveals there are external benefits associated with watching TV.
Will the socially optimal quantity of cable services now be larger than, smaller than, or
equal to the Qs you identified in part (a)(iv)?
4. CD&Z holds a patent on a unique medical device that is used for DNA mapping. Assume
that CD&Z is a single-price profit-maximizing monopolist and is currently earning positive
economic profits.
(a) Draw a correctly labeled graph and show each of the following:
(i) CD&Z's profit-maximizing price and quantity, labeled as P* and Q*
(ii) The area representing CD&Z's economic profits
(iii) The allocatively efficient level of output, labeled as Qs
(b) Instead of maximizing profit, assume that now CD&Z maximizes its total revenue.
(i) On your graph in part (a), identify the output level that CD&Z would choose,
labeled as QR.
(ii) Explain why the output you identified maximizes total revenue.
(c) Assume that the government imposes a set price (a price control) on CD&Z so that the
allocatively efficient level of output, QS is produced.
(i) On your graph in part (a), show this set price, labeled as P S.
(ii) With the price control, explain whether CD&Z maximizes profit at QS.
(d) Assume that now the government levies a per-unit tax of $t on CD&Z's output. Assume
that now CD&Z maximizes its profit.
(i) Compared with P* and Q* in part (a), how will CD&Z's profit-maximizing output and
price change?
(ii) Compared with Q* in part (a), does the per-unit tax lead to a more allocatively efficient
level of output? Explain.
5. A patent gives inventors the exclusive right to produce and market a product for a period
of time. GCR Company is a profit-maximizing firm. It has a patent for a unique
antispyware computer program called Aspy.
(a) Assume that GCR is making economic profit. Draw a correctly labeled graph and show the
profit-maximizing price and quantity.
(b) Assume that the government imposes a lump-sum tax on GCR.
(i) What will happen to output and market price? Explain.
(ii) What will happen to GCR's profits?
(c) Assume instead that the government grants a per-unit subsidy to GCR for Aspy.
(i) What will happen to output and market price? Explain.
(ii) What will happen to GCR's profits?
(d) Now assume that GCR's patent on Aspy expires. What will happen to GCR's economic
profits in the long run? Explain.
6. Assume that Clark Electronics has a monopoly in the production and sale of a new device
for detecting and destroying a computer virus. Clark Electronics currently incurs short-run
losses, but it continues to operate.
(a) What must be true for Clark to continue to operate in the short run?
(b) Draw a correctly labeled graph, and show each of the following for Clark:
(i) The profit-maximizing price and output
(ii) Area of loss
(c) Assume Clark is maximizing profit. What will happen to its total revenue if Clark raises its
price? Explain.
(d) If demand for the new device increases, explain what will happen to each of the following
in the short run:
(i) Profit-maximizing output
(ii) Total cost
7. Social efficiency is affected by government policy and the structure of markets.
(a) For a competitive market for which there is a binding (effective) price ceiling, draw a
correctly labeled graph and label the price ceiling "PC", the quantity sold "QA", and the
socially efficient output "QB".
(b) The graph below shows a natural monopoly.
(i) Using the labeling in the graph, identify each of the following:
(l) The profit-maximizing output Q1. MC=MR
(2) The socially efficient output Q3. MC=D
(ii) At the socially efficient output, is the monopoly making a profit or incurring a loss.
Using the labeling on the graph, identify the area of profit or loss.
Loss. Rectangle DFP1P3
8. The diagram above shows the cost and revenue curves for a bridge to a popular island. The
marginal cost of crossing the bridge is zero and is indicated in the diagram as the
horizontal axis. The price is the toll to cross the bridge, and the output is the number of
autos that cross the bridge each day.
(a) Assume that a private firm owns the bridge and maximizes profits. Based on the diagram,
determine each of the following.
(i) Output Q2
(ii) Price $7
(b) Now assume that a municipality owns the bridge and sets the price to achieve allocative
efficiency. Based on the diagram, determine each of the following.
(i) Output Q4
(ii) Price $0 (P=MC)
(c) At a price of $1, is the municipality’s accounting profit positive, negative, or zero? Explain.
At $1, P = ATC so economic profits are zero. economic profit = accounting profit –
opportunity costs, so accounting profits must be positive (unless there were zero
opportunity costs!)
(d) Suppose that the municipality sets a break-even price that generates revenues to just
cover all economic costs.
(i) Based on the diagram, determine the break-even output. Q3
(ii) At the output you determined in part (d)(i), is the demand relatively elastic, relatively
inelastic, unit elastic, perfectly elastic, or perfectly inelastic? Relatively inelastic
…(MR<0)
(e) If a company begins to provide access to the island via commercial watercraft, what will
happen to each of the following in the diagram?
(i) The demand curve for bridge crossings Shifts to left
(ii) The profit-maximizing output Reduced
(f) Suppose the long-run average total cost is strictly downward sloping. Would it be efficient
to build a second bridge? Explain. No. Already experiencing economies of scale. Second
bridge would increase ATC
9. Steverail, the only provider of train service operating between two cities, is currently
incurring economic losses.
(a) Using a correctly labeled graph, show each of the following.
(i) Steverail’s loss-minimizing price and quantity, labeled Pm and Qm , respectively
(ii) The area of economic losses, shaded completely
(iii) The allocatively efficient quantity, labeled Qe
(d) If Steverail raised the price above Pm identified in part (a)(i), would total revenue increase,
decrease, or not change? Explain.
(c) Assume a per-unit subsidy is provided to Steverail.
(i) Will Steverail’s quantity increase, decrease, or not change? Explain.
(ii) Will consumer surplus increase, decrease, or not change?
(d) Assume instead that a lump-sum subsidy is provided to Steverail. For the short run, answer
the following.
(i) Will the deadweight loss increase, decrease, or not change? Explain.
(ii) Will Steverail’s economic losses increase, decrease, or not change?